- Develop a Business Case
- Undertake a Feasibility Study
- Establish the Project Charter
- Appoint the Project Team
- Set up the Project Office
- Perform Phase Review
- Create a Project Plan
- Create a Resource Plan
- Create a Financial Plan
- Create a Quality Plan
- Create a Risk Plan
- Create an Acceptance Plan
- Create a Communications Plan
- Create a Procurement Plan
- Contract the Suppliers
- Define the Tender Process
- Issue a Statement of Work
- Issue a Request for Information
- Issue a Request for Proposal
- Create Supplier Contract
- Perform Phase Review
- Build Deliverables
- Monitor and Control
- Perform Time Management
- Perform Cost Management
- Perform Quality Management
- Perform Change Management
- Perform Risk Management
- Perform Issue Management
- Perform Procurement Management
- Perform Acceptance Management
- Perform Communications Management
- Perform Project Closure
- Review Project Completion
1) Initiation
In this first stage, the scope of the project is defined along with the approach to be taken to deliver the desired outputs. The project manager is appointed and in turn, he selects the team members based on their skills and experience. The most common tools or methodologies used in the initiation stage are Project Charter, Business Plan, Project Framework (or Overview), Business Case Justification, and Milestones Reviews.
2) Planning
The second phase should include a detailed identification and assignment of each task until the end of the project. It should also include a risk analysis and a definition of a criteria for the successful completion of each deliverable. The governance process is defined, stake holders identified and reporting frequency and channels agreed. The most common tools or methodologies used in the planning stage are Business Plan and Milestones Reviews.
3) Execution and controlling
The most important issue in this phase is to ensure project activities are properly executed and controlled. During the execution phase, the planned solution is implemented to solve the problem specified in the project's requirements. In product and system development, a design resulting in a specific set of product requirements is created. This convergence is measured by prototypes, testing, and reviews. As the execution phase progresses, groups across the organization become more deeply involved in planning for the final testing, production, and support. The most common tools or methodologies used in the execution phase are an update of Risk Analysis and Score Cards, in addition to Business Plan and Milestones Reviews.
4) Closure
In this last stage, the project manager must ensure that the project is brought to its proper completion. The closure phase is characterized by a written formal project review report containing the following components: a formal acceptance of the final product by the client, Weighted Critical Measurements (matching the initial requirements specified by the client with the final delivered product), rewarding the team, a list of lessons learned, releasing project resources, and a formal project closure notification to higher management. No special tool or methodology is needed during the closure phase.